Anthony van Diemen

Anthony van Diemen, (born 1593, Culemborg, Neth.—died April 19, 1645, Batavia, Dutch East Indies), colonial administrator who as governor-general of the Dutch East Indian settlements (1636–45) consolidated the Dutch interests in Southeast Asia.

After an unsuccessful business career in Amsterdam, van Diemen joined the Dutch East India Company, serving in Batavia (now Jakarta, Indon.) from 1618 and becoming governor-general in 1636. To strengthen the company’s rule in the Moluccas, he signed a treaty with the sultan of Ternate in 1638, which freed the company for a war of conquest (1638–43) and resulted in a Dutch spice monopoly in the area. Also in 1638 van Diemen intensified the Dutch attack on Portuguese holdings in Asia with an invasion of Ceylon (Sri Lanka). By 1644 the Dutch had conquered Ceylon’s cinnamon-producing areas and had established posts on India’s Coromandel Coast.

Meanwhile, van Diemen had succeeded in seizing the key Portuguese stronghold of Malacca (1641; Melaka, now in Malaysia) on the trade route between India and China, and in 1642 the Dutch captured all of Formosa (Taiwan), driving out the Spanish. Under his rule, advantageous treaties with the East Indian princes of Aceh (Acheh; Atjeh) and Tidore were signed, and commercial relations with Tonkin (Vietnam) and Japan were established. By the end of van Diemen’s administration, the United Provinces of the Netherlands had become the paramount commercial and political power in insular Southeast Asia.

Van Diemen completed the construction of Batavia in the Dutch pattern of his predecessor, Jan Pieterszoon Coen, including a Latin school, Protestant churches, an orphanage, and a hospital; he also introduced a legal code known as the Batavian statutes. Van Diemen initiated the exploring expeditions of Abel Tasman and Frans Visscher in 1642 and 1644 on which they discovered Tasmania (originally Van Diemen’s Land), New Zealand, Tonga, Fiji, and the northern coast of Australia.